Bible.org Blogs

  • Home
  • Engage|Women
  • Impact|Men
  • Heartprints|Children
  • NetBible
  • Home
  • Engage|Women
  • Impact|Men
  • Heartprints|Children
  • NetBible

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Blogs

  • Home
  • Engage|Women
  • Impact|Men
  • Heartprints|Children
  • NetBible

About

  • Account
  • Bible.org Blogs
  • Bloggers Submission Agreement
  • Blogging Author’s Submissions Guidelines
  • Engage Authors
  • Engage Blog
  • Heartprints Authors
  • Heartprints Blog
  • Impact Authors
  • Impact Blog
  • Login
  • Logout
  • Members
  • Password Reset
  • Register
  • User
  • Engage

    Disruption: Thoughts on Life and Chaos

    June 17, 2020 / 0 Comments

    Recently I set a goal to keep the house in spic and span shape for five days straight.  Admittedly, this isn’t the most exciting thing one can do, but there’s something refreshing about having your surroundings in order….shirts hung neatly on their hangers, shoes in their rightful spot, junk mail sorted out and squared away.  It gives one a sense of orderliness, peacefulness, and, most importantly, control.  So, I set out last Sunday, spent a few hours getting rooms, bathrooms, and closets in top-notch shape, and determined to maintain my newfound tidiness for one week straight. And then life happened. My once-clean home is a far cry from its Sunday start.  And…

    read more
    Michelle Pokorny

    You May Also Like

    Bible back page

    The Blank Pages in Our Bibles

    September 29, 2009
    Kermit the Frog. Who's Green.

    It’s Not Easy, Being Green

    July 24, 2020
    Sue Bohlin in her tiara

    Happy Birthday to Jesus-in-Me!

    February 12, 2013
  • Impact

    Blessed are the Bankrupt

    June 16, 2016 / Comments Off on Blessed are the Bankrupt

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Blessed are the poor in spirit . . . (Mt. 5:3) What stunning, shocking words! What king announces his rule by calling the poor in spirit to him, the bankrupt, those with no resources who bring nothing to him? Only one. The King who is lowly in heart, who offers a light burden because He is not bent down by the weight of pride. Amazingly these are the first recorded words of discipleship Jesus uttered. Jesus requires bankruptcy to enter His kingdom… That’s what it means to be poor in spirit: spiritual bankruptcy, a total lack of resources to do what ultimately…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    20/20 Vision for a Breakthrough

    December 28, 2019

    The Tabernacle of Moses – God’s Heavenly Pattern for our Spiritual Transformation – Part II: The Holy Place – Golden Lampstand

    October 3, 2011
    Daily News Headline

    The Tsunami, Birth Pains, Death, and the End of Days

    March 12, 2011
  • Impact

    Last Things First

    May 24, 2016 / Comments Off on Last Things First

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken The Great Commission was the last words Jesus said, but it was among the first thoughts in His mind as He began His ministry. Why was it that one of the first actions He took was to choose disciples (Mt. 4:18-22) if He did not have a purpose in mind for them? He certainly did not intend to spend the better part of three years preparing followers for nothing… And why did He persevere so relentlessly with them when they rejected His message and thought like Satan (Mark 8:33) or created more confusion than clarity when a father sought their help for…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Succeeding at Ministry to Men in the Local Church – Part III: Summary

    May 13, 2020
    Philosopher II

    What Did the Philosophers Know and When Did They Know it? Part 2

    January 15, 2018

    The Phantom of the Ages

    November 20, 2011
  • Impact

    Start With the End in View

    May 10, 2016 / Comments Off on Start With the End in View

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Jesus started with the end in view. From the first day of His earthly ministry to the last, He had His two-fold purpose before Him: redemption and preparation, the cross and the commission. He came to provide redemption for dying men and women. But what good would His redemptive death be if there were no one to tell others what it means? How could He establish a redemptive movement if He had no one to start it? That’s why He declared to His Father before the cross that He had accomplished His will by making the Father known to those He had…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Part XIII: The Lord of the Scroll – The King of Kings Returns to Earth!

    April 11, 2011

    The Fifth Opportunity

    July 23, 2012

    The Tabernacle of Moses – God’s Heavenly Pattern for our Spiritual Transformation – Part VI: The Priestly Garments

    July 9, 2018
  • Impact

    The Beatitudes Attitude: Introduction

    May 3, 2016 / Comments Off on The Beatitudes Attitude: Introduction

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Today we start a new series drawn from the Beatitudes which describe the abounding blessings of Christ in us. We start with the introduction this week, go to a preview with our next entry, and then we will look at each of the Beatitudes to see what these blessings mean to us as we seek to grow in the Beatitudes Attitude. Blessed are . . . (Matthew 5:1-12) The first recorded words of Jesus to His future disciples were words of blessing, and what blessings they are! These blessings are the essence of life that have endured through the ages and define…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Succeeding at Ministry to Men in the Local Church – Part III: Summary

    May 13, 2020

    Phase III: God’s Rock Tumbler!

    July 19, 2010

    God’s Thoughts and Ways Part IV – (Balaam)

    July 13, 2015
  • Impact

    The Ultimate Wilderness – Series Finale

    April 22, 2016 / Comments Off on The Ultimate Wilderness – Series Finale

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Wilderness Wanderings Series Finale: Learning to Live the Zigzag Life AD 33, 9:00 AM Passover Friday, the Place of the Skull, a public place near Jerusalem.   Many people are coming and going, some stopping to see what was happening, observing three men on crosses, two criminals with Jesus in the middle.   A large crowd had followed the crucifixion detail out of the city to the place of execution, the place of the ultimate wilderness…  No one knew it was the ultimate wilderness on that spring morning. Not the Pharisees or the Sadducees, the instigators of the crucifixion. Not the high…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Plaster Eyeless Baby

    Slavery and Abortion in a Nutshell

    July 2, 2022

    The ABCs of Sinless Christian Living

    September 13, 2010

    Focus on Conformance, not Performance!

    February 10, 2019
  • Impact

    The Lucky Wilderness

    April 7, 2016 / Comments Off on The Lucky Wilderness

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Wilderness Wanderings Series: Learning to Live the Zigzag Life John Paine calls himself “the luckiest man in the world,” and most agreed with him some years ago.   When John was in the seventh grade he decided he would be physically strong, and he worked until he became a superior athlete who played for college football. Then he decided to transfer to a top ten engineering school and strive to become intellectually strong, and he succeeded by graduating Summa Cum Laude. Upon graduation, John married his high school sweetheart and started his family.   At the same time he decided he would…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Religious Folklore – The Christian Life is one of Receiving Forgiveness for but not Victory over Habitual Sins

    April 15, 2017

    God’s Thoughts and Ways – Part VIII (Joseph)

    March 14, 2016

    God’s Thoughts and Ways – Part VII (National Judgment)

    November 2, 2015
  • Impact

    The Parenting Wilderness

    April 1, 2016 / Comments Off on The Parenting Wilderness

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Wilderness Wanderings Series: Learning to Live the Zigzag Life Among all the books on parenting that are floating around these days, there is one missing. It’s hard to believe that we’ve overlooked anything, but we are lacking one vital title.   I’m not sure how the publishers would respond to this, but in this time of self-publishing, they are not as dominant as they once were, which means this book might make it to the market.   The title? Parents Who Did Everything Right and Got it Wrong. There, I told you it would be a best seller. Well, maybe not. Unwanted…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    New Leaven

    The New Leaven of the Kingdom of Heaven

    April 1, 2021

    2018: Year of God’s Presence

    January 9, 2018

    The Leader, Not Leadership

    September 14, 2017
  • Impact

    The Self-Imposed Wilderness

    March 26, 2016 / Comments Off on The Self-Imposed Wilderness

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Wilderness Wanderings Series: Learning to Live the Zigzag Life Striving to Meet Needs that Should Never be Met   Many of my wilderness experiences have been self-imposed. They grew out of drivenness within me, the fruit of selfish ambition, fear, and anger that created unmet needs in my heart…   And those needs should never have been met. That means that many of my wilderness experiences could have been avoided if only I had been aware that my drivenness and my ambition—pursued sincerely, I believe, in the name of Jesus—were mixed with the slag self glory.   I did not understand that…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Silver

    December 12, 2021

    ABCs Part I: Avert Your Senses!

    September 27, 2010

    Honey

    July 3, 2021
  • Impact

    The Island Wilderness

    March 18, 2016 / 1 Comment

      Leadership is broken because leaders are unbroken Wilderness Wanderings Series: Learning to Live the Zigzag Life He must have been too hot to touch, that ancient elder of Ephesus, or the Roman authorities probably would have taken him in much sooner than they did… Maybe they were concerned that, since he was so beloved, there would have been a strong reaction in Ephesus, the number two city in the Roman Empire, if they took him into custody. Ephesus was a place where they did not want any unrest. Whatever their reasoning, by the time they exiled him he was in his nineties, perhaps frail and declining in health. His…

    read more
    Bill Lawrence

    You May Also Like

    Leading Men’s Small Groups – How To Support Men Going Through Difficult Times

    February 22, 2020

    Authentic Relationships: Introduction

    March 2, 2015

    Evil is Triumphing over Good, God Will You Do Nothing?

    April 16, 2018
 Older Posts

Recent Posts

  • Prone to Wander
  • How to View Work as Worship—Not a Curse
  • The Power of Light…Seeking The Brightness”
  • On the Trinity and Gender Hierarchy
  • Tell the Next Generation About the Lord

Archives

Categories

  • Bock
  • Engage
  • Heartprints
  • Impact
  • NetBible
  • Uncategorized

Meta

  • Register
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
2023 © Bible.org
Ashe Theme by WP Royal.